Stephen Ambrose's "Rise To Globalism"
Stephen Ambrose's "Rise To Globalism"
This is a review of Stephen Ambrose's book "Rise To Globalism", which covers America's position and actions in the wars in the 20th century.
2,685 words (
approx. 10.7 pages) |
3 sources |
MLA | 2001
Paper Summary:
This is a detailed examination of Stephen Ambrose, and Douglas Brinkley's book "Rise to Globalism" that deals with American foreign policy from 1938 through the Clinton administration. The author looks at the different styles of both authors, and the topics they they cover independently in the book and contrast their evaluation of U.S. foreign policy, with three other books that have been written by different historians on the same subject, in order to garner whether or not the information they are presented is accurate.
From the Paper:
"According to Brinkley, economically the U.S. changed from being self-sufficient to being dependent on other countries for economic success, especially the oil producing nations. In 1973 all of the United States was gripped in an oil crisis causing numerous economic problems and long lines as people waited to get what gas they could. And all of this was not produced by some sort of actual shortage of oiling the earth, but an angry OPEC, which was a group of middle eastern oil tycoons. OPEC put an embargo on the U.S. and thus our global reliance on other countries oil sent us reeling. Before our global expansion no other country had this much control over the U.S. and it s economy."
Stephen Ambrose's "Rise To Globalism" (2012, January 15). Retrieved February 13, 2012, from http://www.academon.com/Book-Review-Stephen-Ambrose's-Rise-To-Globalism/4646
"Stephen Ambrose's "Rise To Globalism"" 15 January 2012. Web. 13 Feb. 2012. <http://www.academon.com/Book-Review-Stephen-Ambrose's-Rise-To-Globalism/4646>